The Crowd (1951 film) explained

The Crowd
Director:Silvio Laurenti Rosa
Producer:Silvio Laurenti Rosa
Starring:Marie Glory
Tino Buazzelli
Gilberto Mazzi
Cinematography:Furio Maggi
Giuseppe Piccinelli
Giulio Rufini
Runtime:93 minutes
Country:Italy
Language:Italian

The Crowd (Italian: '''La Folla''') is a 1951 Italian film.

Plot

While a director is shooting a film, his aide (aka the assistant director) throws a bomb badly, sending the director, aide, and operator to the other world. Then the director thinks of making a film, which tells the story, highlighting how the crowd makes history. While the crowd raises its idols and then tears them down, the world is full of turncoats, who are serving their interests, deceiving the people. On the screen there are: Pontius Pilate and Jesus, vilified by the crowd. Richelieu, the French Revolution, the First Empire, Garibaldi, Cavour, Napoleon III, the Pope, the Duce, the Germans, the partisans and the armeggione, who juggles between one and the other, always staying afloat.

Cast